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Similarities Between 'Les Miserables And The Book Thief'

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White Noise: A Character Study

There is a reason we love the characters we do when it comes to literature. They are relatable, and give us room to project our fears and dreams onto them. They give the story something that it needed, something it would have lacked without them there. When an author can perfect a character, make them so delicately designed we can almost pull them from the pages, the story turns into a masterpiece. The last two novels discussed during this course, Les Miserables and The Book Thief, use characters in very different ways. One to simply push a plot, and one to make the reader feel it. The first character we meet when we begin Les Miserables is Jean Valjean. The most revered trait of his is the change he undergoes throughout the novel. He goes from a heartless convict to a gentle, caring old corpse. However, was there really that big of a transition between the start and end? Did he lack empathy, or was it merely his exterior? Remember the scene with Petite Gervais; he was instantly stricken with remorse over …show more content…

Eponine’s affection for Marius in Les Miserables is so unwavering that it extends beyond our reality, making her seem crazy, a trait no one will relate to. We do not feel her agony, but find it at most pathetic and at least humorous. The Hoptzafels, on the other hand, undergo changes due to loss and trauma. Michael’s emotional and phsyical state change on page 502 following his suicide. “The laundry was warm, the rafters were firm, and Michael Hoptzafel jumped from the chair as if it were a cliff” (Zusak, 502). Frau Hoptzafel, his now bereaved mother, acts much like Rosa. She starts as a harsh woman that despises the Hubermann’s to being comforted by Hans while being “laid flat out on Himmel Street, her arms out wide, her screaming face in total despair” (Zusak, 503). They react to trauma, and do so in such a way that makes us react, as

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